We Can See Our Bubbles, But Prefer To Close Our Eyes

 | Feb 23, 2015 06:55AM ET

Summary: Bubbles in the information age differ from those of simpler times. Now we have real-time data showing our folly. Here’s a brief review, another in our series of posts about this mad cycle. Listen while you read and you’ll hear the stock market roaring to the moon.

“You can’t cheat an honest man.”
— Title of W. C. Fields movie, describing the essence of bubbles (1940). Bubbles are consensual hallucinations. Each participant choose to join.

h3 (1) Goldman tells the story/h3

As usual, Goldman gives us clear analysis, in mild professional language — seeing events earlier than the rest of the pack. Via Zero Hedge ). The 21st century differs from anything seen before. We see it as distinct phases; future generations will see it as one event (as we’ve combined what participants saw as seperate events into the War of the Roses and the Napoleonic Wars).

Stocks with attractive valuation are rare in the current environment of stretched share prices. The aggregate S&P 500 trades at 17.3x forward EPS and 10.2x EV/EBITDA. The only time during the past 40 years that the index traded at a higher multiple was during the 1997-2000 Tech Bubble. The median stock sports a P/E and EV/EBITDA of 18.0x and 11.0x, respectively. These valuations rank in the 99th percentile of both P/E and EV/EBITDA multiples since 1976.